Jodi Arias: Convicted Murderer Loses Visitation Rights for Vulgar Remark, Officials SayArias, convicted for killing her boyfriend in 2008, lost privileges for around 200 days after she called a female correctional officer a crude name, according to the Arizona Department of Corrections.

Jodi Arias denied visitation for six months

Posted: Feb 15, 2016 10:33 AM ESTUpdated: Feb 15, 2016 10:33 AM EST

After using a vulgar insult toward a corrections officer, Jodi Arias was denied visitation. (Source: Pool via CNN)After using a vulgar insult toward a corrections officer, Jodi Arias was denied visitation. (Source: Pool via CNN)(CNN) - Jodi Arias will not be seeing any visitors for the next six months.

The Arizona Department of Corrections says Arias has temporarily lost her visitation privileges.

The 35-year-old is serving a life sentence after being convicted of murdering her boyfriend.

According to officials, Arias called a correctional officer a vulgar insult after she was denied a haircut. Arias will have to demonstrate 180 days of good behavior in order to see visitors again.

Whew! Looks like Jodie Arias had better watch her behavior. Six months without a visitor for shooting off her mouth after being denied a haircut. I wonder if she will behave herself and serve her time or is this the start of a downhill spiral? I wonder if she's angry and frustrated with being incarcerated and it's finally hitting home. She's got a long time left in prison...

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" Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not his own facts." - Daniel Moynihan

Jodi Arias: Convicted Murderer Loses Visitation Rights for Vulgar Remark, Officials SayArias, convicted for killing her boyfriend in 2008, lost privileges for around 200 days after she called a female correctional officer a crude name, according to the Arizona Department of Corrections.

Jodi Arias denied visitation for six months

Posted: Feb 15, 2016 10:33 AM ESTUpdated: Feb 15, 2016 10:33 AM EST

After using a vulgar insult toward a corrections officer, Jodi Arias was denied visitation. (Source: Pool via CNN)After using a vulgar insult toward a corrections officer, Jodi Arias was denied visitation. (Source: Pool via CNN)(CNN) - Jodi Arias will not be seeing any visitors for the next six months.

The Arizona Department of Corrections says Arias has temporarily lost her visitation privileges.

The 35-year-old is serving a life sentence after being convicted of murdering her boyfriend.

According to officials, Arias called a correctional officer a vulgar insult after she was denied a haircut. Arias will have to demonstrate 180 days of good behavior in order to see visitors again.

Whew! Looks like Jodie Arias had better watch her behavior. Six months without a visitor for shooting off her mouth after being denied a haircut. I wonder if she will behave herself and serve her time or is this the start of a downhill spiral? I wonder if she's angry and frustrated with being incarcerated and it's finally hitting home. She's got a long time left in prison...

Couldn't happen to a more deserving person. She still thinks she is above us mere mortals.

“Jodi Arias believed that if her I.Q. was measured it would be something like in the area of Albert Einstein. So, she probably thought that she could get away with it,” prosecutor Juan Martinez told INSIDE EDITION.

“What she did to Travis Alexander was absolutely horrific. The act of taking the knife and sticking it in his chest, and sliced his throat while he was still alive, that speaks to horrific overkill on her part.”

PHOENIX — Jodi Arias' case remains a headache for Arizona's court system long after her murder trial had spectators lining up for seats, attorneys squabbling in court and two different juries deadlocking on whether she deserved the death penalty.

Problems compiling trial transcripts have delayed Arias' appeal of her first-degree murder conviction by about a year.

Lawyers use trial transcripts to identify and document grounds for appeals. In Arias' case, the state Court of Appeals had to repeatedly prod some of the trial's 22 court reporters to finish transcripts, and at one point even ordered that dozens of transcripts be destroyed and redone because of errors and omissions.

The reporter responsible for most of the transcripts told the court his production was hindered by a computer malfunction, his own cancer treatment and the amount of work involved in Arias' case and others. Other reporters cited workload issues.

It wasn't until April 24, nearly two years after the appeals process formally started, that the Court of Appeals declared the record complete, with nearly 25,000 pages of transcripts, over 950 exhibits and 21 written motions for dismissal or mistrial.

More than three months later, the court finally set deadlines in 2018 for the defense and prosecution to file legal briefs. A three-judge panel then will consider the appeal, perhaps after hearing oral arguments.